Bank of La Center v. Sinnott

173 S.W. 1154, 163 Ky. 529, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 256
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 11, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 173 S.W. 1154 (Bank of La Center v. Sinnott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of La Center v. Sinnott, 173 S.W. 1154, 163 Ky. 529, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 256 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hannah

Affirming.

John Sinnott, Sr., in 1865 became a resident of Paducah, and died there on August 31, 1907. Por a number of years prior to and until a few days before his death he had been the principal shareholder in a corporation known as the • Thompson Wilson & Company, distributors of whiskey. In the latter part of 1907 this corporation failed, and its affairs were liquidated in bankruptcy proceedings. Sinnott was endorser upon some of its paper. There was an action to settle his estate, but only a negligible dividend was realized for the creditors.

The Thompson Wilson & Company was indebted to the Bank of La Center in the sum of two thousand dollars, originally created April 20, 1905; and to the Brook-port National Bank in the sum of one thousand dollars, originally created October 19, 1903; and to the National Bank of Metropolis in the sum of one thousand dollars, originally created March 3, 1904; and in the additional sum of fifteen hundred dollars, originally created May 28, 1900. Upon all this paper Sinnott was endorser.

These unsatisfied creditors united in this present action against Mrs. Elizabeth Sinnott, widow of John Sinnott, Sr., and sought to subject to the satisfaction of their claims the rents and profits of certain improved real estate in Paducah owned by Mrs. Sinnott, upon which the plaintiffs claim that Mr. Sinnott, in fraud of their rights as creditors of the Thompson Wilson & Company, had placed valuable improvements and buildings out of his own individual resources.

The chancellor found against the plaintiffs and they are here upon appeal.

The case has been extensively briefed by counsel for the respective parties, and many interesting questions of substantive law and of procedure have been presented, in addition to discussions of the facts themselves; but in view of the conclusions which we have reached [531]*531concerning the merits of the case, after a study of the record, we find it unnecessary to dwell upon the legal phases of the controversy.

The facts appearing in the record are substantially as follows: John Sinnott and Elizabeth Sinnott were married in June, 1865. At that time he was twenty-six years of age, and had accumulated from twenty to twentj'-five thousand dollars. A short time before the marriage he purchased a lot at the corner of Eighth and Monroe Streets, in the city of Paducah; and, during the summer of 1865, he built thereon, a cottage, the cost of which was about thirty-six hundred dollars, which the Sinnotts occupied as a home until 1894. This property Sinnott conveyed in 1868 to Q. Q. Quigley, trustee for his wife and children, with reversion to himself upon failure of issue; but on May 29, 1901, the trustee and the four children, together with the husband, united in a conveyance thereof direct to Mrs. Sinnott.

In 1868 Sinnott also purchased a lot at the corner of Ninth and Monroe Streets, in Paducah, adjoining the property above mentioned. This, on January 29, 1883, he conveyed to George C. Thompson. Thompson, on May 14, 1884, conveyed it to Quigley, trustee for Mrs. Sinnott; and, on May 22, 1897, the trustee conveyed it direct to Mrs. Sinnott, Thompson joining in the deed, because his deed to the trustee had become misplaced.

In 1876 Sinnott and W. S. Dick purchased a farm in Illinois opposite Paducah, the former causing his half interest to be conveyed in trust for Mrs. Sinnott. In 1884 she purchased Dick’s half interest herself. In 1892 she sold the farm for eight thousand dollars, placing the proceeds on temporary loan with the Thompson Wilson & Company, the corporation of which her husband after-wards became the principal shareholder.

In 1877 Sinnott, who had been engaged in the business of constructing improved streets in Paducah and gravel roads, having received as part of the contract price for the construction of the North Ballard Gravel Road certain shares of its capital stock, gave them to his wife; and thereafter she continued to receive dividends thereon until 1897, when she sold the shares to the county for sixty-three hundred dollars. The dividends were eight hundred dollars per annum. This sixty-three hundred dollars she placed on temporary loan with John G. Rinkliffe, a close and trusted friend of her husband, [532]*532and owner of one-third of the shares- of the Thompson Wilson & Company.

In 1894 Mrs. Sinnott constructed on the lot at Ninth and Monroe Streets a brick residence which the family thereafter occupied as home; and she thereafter received the rentals of their former home at Eighth and Monroe, the property which her husband had given her in 1868.

On May 1, 1897, the day after she received the sixty-three hundred dollars for-her Gravel Road shares, Mrs. Sinnott purchased a lot on Fourth Street, in Paducah, from the Paducah Transfer Company, on which there was a large brick livery stable, and.which had at one time been owned by her husband. She erected a business building on this lot in 1897, which she leased to the Thompson & Wilson Company at sixty-five dollars per month, and she thereafter received seventy-five dollars per month as the rental of the livery stable.

In 1902 she caused the livery stable to be torn down, and to be erected in its place a briJj business building of three store rooms, the building being three stories in' height.

It is this Fourth Street property and, in particular, the buildings thereon erected in 1902, the rentals of which the appellants are seeking to subject to the satisfaction of their claims, upon the assertion that John Sinnott, Sr., fraudulently diverted his individual funds into this improvement of his wife’s real estate to the prejudice of his creditors.

It appears from the record that, although the deed from the Paducah Transfer Company to Mrs. Sinnott executed in May, 1897, conveying the Fourth Street lot, recited a paid consideration of ten thousand dollars, only one thousand dollars of the purchase price was paid ,at or about the time of the purchase, the remaining nine thousand dollars being assumed by the purchaser to be paid, five thousand dollars to Henry Burnett and four thousand dollars to Noble & Bonnerman. Shortly after the purchase she paid Noble & Bonnerman three thousand dollars; and in 1902 she paid the remaining one thousand dollars to them out of the proceeds of a note discounted by the First National Bank. At the same time she mortgaged the Fourth Street property to E. W. Smith and obtained a loan of ten thousand dollars, using five thousand dollars thereof in paying the Henry [533]*533Burnett note. She then began the construction of the 1902 buildings on the Fourth Street property.

It is the contention of appellee that these buildings were constructed out of her funds remaining with the Thompson Wilson & Company on temporary loan; out of the five thousand dollars remaining from the E. W. Smith loan, together with accrued rentals, and the proceeds of a fifteen hundred dollar note discounted by the First National Bank; leaving certain material bills unpaid when the buildings were completed, but which were later paid out of the rentals.

The appellants contend that a large sum was diverted from the individual resources of John Sinnott, Sr., into the construction of the 1902 buildings.

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173 S.W. 1154, 163 Ky. 529, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-la-center-v-sinnott-kyctapp-1915.